Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,292,724 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

"A Fiction of Authenticity": Contemporary Art Center St. Louis.


This exhibition of newly commissioned artwork by eleven African artists born between 1956 and 1976 and working in Europe or the United States inaugurates this institution's new building and, presumably, higher profile. The curators--Shannon Fitzgerald of the Contemporary and Tumelo Mosaka of New York's Brooklyn Museum--"seek to analyze constructions of perceptions (fictions) about what constitutes an authentic Africa ... and to what extent one's Africanness is expressed, understood, exploited, and relevant in contemporary global culture."

Siemon Allen (born in South Africa, lives in Washington, DC) focuses in on the view from elsewhere. He's assembled two years of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, mounted it on the wall, and covered it with tracing paper, except for the rare but predictable (AIDS, Mandela) articles on South Africa. Other artists grapple with their identity as Africans abroad: Fatma Charfi's Suisse du Sud, Expo 03, 2003, is made up of innumerable aberics (the word means "humans" in Arabic), tiny figures twisted from black, white, and red tissue and installed in small or large jumbles. Though they're standins for her multiple identity as an Arab from North Africa living in Switzerland, these simple creatures also suggest the fragility of individuals of all kinds. And London-based Zineb Sedira, Paris-born of Algerian parents, presents video and photographs of her Arabic-speaking mother, Arabic- and French-speaking father, and English-speaking daughter that provide a moving window on Algerian colonial history as lived out within a single family.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Other artists cast an ambivalent eye on the modern(ist) century. Odili Donald Odita (born in Nigeria, lives in Florida) contributed three large abstract acrylics along with small drawings of street musicians and boys studying the Koran, among other everyday subjects. His abstractions riff on the classics of the genre, but their palette of greens, oranges, and violets and even a certain compositional sensibility seem traceable to his childhood in Nigeria. The giant black-and-white paintings of Owusu-Ankomah (born in Ghana, lives in Germany) juxtapose symbols from Ghanaian funerary cloth with Western ideograms such as the sign for "radioactive" or corporate logos, creating in the process a species of abstract history painting history painting, the painting of scenes from classical and Christian history and mythology. It was taught in the academies of art, from the Renaissance to the 19th cent., as the highest form of art in an hierarchical grouping that ranked still-life painting lowest on the list.. And Mary Evans (born in Nigeria, lives in London) created a type of paper-cutout rosette
Flexner-Wintersteiner rosette  a spoke- and wheel-shaped cell formation seen in retinoblastoma and certain other ophthalmic tumors.
Homer Wright rosette  a circular or spherical grouping of dark tumor cells around a pale, eosinophilic, central area that contains neurofibrils but lacks a lumen; seen in some medulloblastomas, neuroblastomas, and retinoblastomas or other ophthalmic tumors.
 window for the gallery walls that is furthermore meant to be viewed through a kaleidoscope. Stylized images--razors, bright red hearts, "hangman" gallows, and slave-ship diagrams--meet, lock, and unlock as the viewer peers through and manipulates the device.

The question that may remain is this: To what extent is the common artistic language of these young artists--Conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept. These concepts are not arbitrary inventions but are reflections of similarities among particular things themselves, e.g., the concept male reflects a similarity between Paul and John.-derived, unrestricted by medium, with a relatively easy-to-access identity-based political content--itself a fiction, or at least an almost too-convenient vehicle? But, murmurings aside, this exhibition's ambition, clarity, and openly progressive politics cannot be dismissed.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Saint Louis
Author:Carrier, David
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:453
Previous Article:Ulrike Ottinger: Renaissance Society.(Chicago)
Next Article:Nicolau Vergueiro: Golinko Kordansky Gallery.(Los Angeles)



Related Articles
Text as trickster: postmodern language games in Gerald Vizenor's 'Bearheart.' (Maskers and Tricksters)
Draw a story ... write a picture.(includes tips for teachers on how to implement a writing-art project)
Vincent van Gogh and the Painters of the Petit Boulevard.
Contemporary art in U.S. Museums.(listing of museums and exhibitions)(Directory)(Calendar)
The White House's 2003 Coming Up Taller Awards.(Honor Roll)(to community arts and humanities programs)(Brief Article)
Current events.(Calendar)
A letter from the editor.(Editorial)
The downtown hotels of St. Louis: why choose downtown St. Louis for your convention, meeting or trade show?
A ballet company grows in St. Louis.(DANCE MATTERS)(Saint Louis Ballet)(Interview)
Interactive learning: sculpture.(Museum Musings)(slam.org/sfysculpture)(www.laumeier.org/sfysculpture )(Website overview)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles